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Reply to "Drs firing patients "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I am hearing this is becoming an issue. It seems a Dr can refuse to see a patient if the patient is deemed annoying (by asking questions) or for no reason at all. Until recently I have never heard of this and I have heard this multiple times. In some cases the patient is on Medicare. How can this be suddenly happening? Is it legal and what is the driving force? [/quote] OP I am not a doctor but a healthcare professional who works with a variety of patients. I “fire” patients all the time for non-compliance. I am not there to validate their own perspective about their health. If they don’t agree with my approach and take action to implement I’m not interested in working with them. [/quote] Stop playing and come down off that cross![/quote] The pp is correct. Doctors are autonomous professionals any are not required to take on any and everyone unless they are working in an ER. A lawyer doesn’t have to take or keep your case, a contractor doesn’t have to do your job. Neither does a doctor if they think you can’t work productively together. You’re not entitled to treat a professional poorly and still demand they serve you or do business with you. Perspectives may differ but unless you can prove it is discrimination against a protected class, you are free to find another doctor.[/quote] Deciding to not follow a doctor’s advice is not “treating them poorly.” They give advice; the patient decides whether to take it or not. The doctor is not the boss or God. I personally would not keep seeing a doctor whose advice I frequently disagreed with, but we don’t know the whole situation. I’m guessing the “medical professional” here is a chiropractor or similar.[/quote] If your attitude in this response is any indication of your posture as a patient, I wouldn’t be surprised if more than one “medical professional” had encouraged you to take your business elsewhere. Most doctors won’t fire a pleasant patient with legitimate questions or garden variety noncompliance. It’s when someone repeatedly shows up for appointments (or doesn’t) with an antagonistic attitude (fights the diagnosis, fights the work up, fights the treatment, fights the schedule, fights the staff, fights the profession) and it becomes clear that their real agenda is conflict (either actively or passively), that they will eventually be encouraged to move on. Slots are limited and could go to another person who is more willing to accept the help being offered.[/quote]
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